DIE BASEBALL, DIE.
Minimal football noise today, so let’s access that spleen and talk about how much another corrupt, shitty sport blows. No particular reason.
Full of shit, but will get you laid: Baudrillard.We’re big Jean Baudrillard fans, and not because we’re some organic tea-sipping grad student getting wood to the concept of actually writing crap bollocks about art, meaning, and dissecting meaning without having to actually come up with any ourselves. You’re out there, we know who you are, and we will refrain from making the Starbucks serve-us-our-latte professor joke, because many of you do indeed go on to do terrible things like teach Lacan and Derrida to smartstruck private school kids cowed by your ability to string together three sentences together and use the phrase “late-stage capitalism” without shitting yourself from shame.
Plus, when you can quote shit like this pants just fly off smart ladies not quite smart enough to realize just how full of shit you really are:
Like dreams, statistics are a form of wish fulfillment.
That’s Baudrillard, who rules like Motorhead because he’s totally quotable, completely full of shit, and sold tons of books in France despite the fact that he, himself, would remind anyone he was brimming with intellectual fecal matter. He insisted, in fact, on most everything being fake and shitty–simulacra–mere imitations of things that once existed, and that most culture was just growing like the fingernails and hair on a corpse.
Drop that at a cocktail party, and someone will probably either pose thoughtfully or call you a homosexual. Either way you’re going for the bullshit gold, since it’s English major bongwater primo stuff. However, it may rightfully describe the EDSBS official Most Despised Game, not a sport, but a game, the hypertrophied croquet match that is baseball, and the fact that old incontinent people care enough about it to waste an ex-Senator’s time on whether or nor its players are taking illegal supplements.
(Let us clarify that we don’t care whether baseball players are injecting mule piss into their veins or eating the live, still-beating hearts of polar bears in order to gain a competitive edge. This is because we don’t care about baseball outside of a lingering affection for fat players like John Kruk from our youth and good hooker stories involving profligate man-whores like Mickey Mantle, who once answered an ex-Yankee survey with a rambling account of a blowjob he received under the bleachers. He concluded with this quote, paraphrased as best we can remember:
She asked me what to do with the come, and I said, “Don’t ask me, I’m no cocksucker.”
See? Baseball’s not all bad! Except for the game, the management of the sport, and evidently the whole collection of cheating bastards who made up its elite players in the 1990s/2000s)
Things die, clothes fray, computers crash, and species extinctify, and sometimes, the nails growing on a corpse simulate life. In fact, this is what baseball’s done, buffeted by four or five huge major franchises while dragging the whole bleeding cripple party of other franchises along with them. Record profits! Bullshit, as exemplified by the large franchises who skew the curve. Bentonville, Arkansas, the whole thing: a little town whose average income is swelled by the immense wealth of the handful of franchises raking money in hand over fist, millionaires surrounded by the squalor of their neighbors.
And the sport itself lurches along like a reanimated corpse. After three solid years of intense football watching, we went to a Braves game this past season, and we’d say the entire exercise was an extravagant waste of time if we hadn’t had Lexus level access and thus a intravenous mainline of beer and popcorn. And even after 14 beers, the game was like watching at tribe of macaques pick nits off each other: stasis periodically interrupted when, at a gusty 25% of the time clip, someone hit a tiny ball a sniper could barely pick up at one of the bored, improbably huge macaques. Then everyone settled down and began drinking again and talking on their cell phones.
Even when completely drunk, it sucked with the force of ten thousand Reggie Balls rolling downhill in a big gremlin-ball of suck. No contact, no passion, no energy, and as much strategy as a game of horse-shoes. Wait, that’s a disservice to horseshoes. None. If someone preens on one more time about the strategy involved in baseball, we will drop a safe on you from a great height, because there’s simply nothing going on out there. At least the British admit the whole thing is a front for beer-drinking and lolling around outside for a few days. We’d like it if baseball games lasted three days like cricket test-matches, if only because the epic drunk you’d get on would likely get Viking war songs written about you, your friends, and the time you each drank a 24-pack before noon without dying.
Instead, in baseball, you get this alleged psychodrama between batter and pitcher, who in the minds of most everyone are fighting a mental swordfight while tiptoeing on water like the assassins in Hero. In reality, baseball players are among the stupidest athletes we’ve ever seen–at least football players, big, lummoxy football players, may have been to college. Baseball players are recruited straight from high school, meaning they dive straight from being a high-school manchild to being million-dollar bonus babies at the age of nineteen, meaning that like the horde of Genghis Khan, the future inhabitants of the world may be by percentage all related to some baseball player, since rich nineteen year olds are only interested in pillaging the Hooters and strip clubs of this nation. Unlike you, though, they don’t wear condoms and have the money to do the whole thing properly, which explains how even white bread Steve Garvey ended up spurting out a whole flock of milquetoast lustspawn intent on making him a merely affluent man.
Really, batter and pitcher are just trading ones and zeros, and doing so poorly in most instances in between all the jock-adjusting, spitting, and stepping out of the box to twitch and scope trim in the stands. (Read Ball Four. We’re not making this up.) The rest of the time, everyone else just….stands around scoping trim in the stands.
Oh, but the romance! The history! It’s our national pastime, hearkening back to a SAHAHAKEREEGGHGHHKKKFJDmakdfadfkjg. Apologies. That noise was us garroting George Will, W.P. Kinsella, and any of the other bullshit geysers who’ve built up the myth that for some reason, merely because it’s very old and has been around a long time, that there’s some kind of moral or cultural onus to like baseball. (God, that felt good.) No one’s better at pulling a phantom peanut of sublimity from steaming turd of reality than a writer, and in baseball they’ve had a whole open sewer to browse in their quest to make shinola from shit. (Do you even know what shinola is? It’s shoe polish, which normal people use to shine shoes, and baseball players try to eat spread on crackers before spitting it out and saying “BOOO YUCKY” and impregnating a stripper.)
There’s a whole heap of turdulent literature just collecting flies out there, all of it devoted to baseball. Most of it should be burned and scattered to the winds, excepting Ball Four, which is about what rat bastard life as a player is really like, and that awesome book about how the 1986 Mets were all on cocaine, because books about people doing cocaine in the 1980s are the highest form of literature and fuck your mother if you don’t agree.
The sport should have been dead for years, and if the Mitchell report surprises anyone, then you, anyone, should be relegated to the salt mines along with people who like Family Guy and those who don’t use their turn signals in traffic. OMG, people are suddenly just so much bigger now in like a year! If this shocked anyone after years of stats and norms being established with interminable death-march 162 game seasons…we mean, it would have marked a spurt not just in baseball’s evolution, but humanity’s. Sammy Sosa should have had Waterworld gills. Mark McGwire should have been telekinetic, and Albert Pujols should have had the ability to levitate (over the border! To Mexico! For illegal steroids!).
In conclusion, we were going to say die, baseball, die, but considering it’s been dead for decades anyway, there’s no reason to send a duplicate death certificate around. Instead: Baudrillard, fingernails, corpse. There’s your snapshot there. No one mourns the moa, no one misses the Edsel, and when we’re eighty or so, no one will really mourn football since by then it’ll all be flying robots with chainsaws farting balls out of their shiny titanium rectums and sodomizing each other after whatever constitutes a goal occurs while the crowd roars for Beef Supreme to enter the arena. (Personally, we can’t wait for this. If brains in jars are involved, we’re already looking forward to it, and it doesn’t even exist yet.)
Cricket’s huge in India we hear. Going offshore may be the best decision, especially with all those lax overseas pharma rules. You’ll be able to inject whatever you want, and the only real threat to the sport will be nuclear war between Pakistan and India. And with that much nandralone coursing through your system, players might just breathe deep and exhale fire without harm in the face of it all.
Postscript: Yeah? But what about football problems steroids corruption blah blah blah. Ooooh, diversion! Someone graduated from the Playskool Institute of Fucktard rhetoric! Let us restate: this is about baseball, which we hate for all of the reasons stated above. Not about football, a sport crippled in its own special way. We’re not arguing about which one’s better. That’s obvious: football, which trounces pantywaisted baseball in a street fight and smashes its face into a bus stop sign with ease. Even pro football’s better than baseball. Dammit, we’ll go there: Golf’s better than baseball, because there’s a chance we can listen to David Feherty and marvel at John Daly’s ability to not die and have the DTs on air. We’d rather tie our balls to a 747 and give the clearance from the tower ourselves than watch golf, but that’s the truth.









101
Erik says:
Eeeeuch, baseball. Eeeeeeeuch. Give me football or give me death. Or hockey, hockey is actually pretty fucking fantastic.
It’s a damned shame that people will watch a hockey game on TV and then decide they don’t like it. TV hockey != real actual hockey.
God, what a glorious sport. And college hockey, too, for actually playing a game instead of just trying to fight as many other players as possible.
December 13th, 2007 at 10:06 pm
102
Chris says:
I’m sure you knew this already, but fingernails and hair do not grow on corpses. They appear to grow as the surrounding flesh loses moisture and pulls away. Kind of like the process for making beef jerky.
December 13th, 2007 at 10:14 pm
103
NewAZTiger says:
#88 – Soccer is fun to play, but the Red Card is the most heavy-handed penalty in all of sports because it makes you play shorthanded for the rest of the game and the player is out the next game.
Maybe it was a good idea before ACLs could be repaired, but in this day and age, it just encourages sissified flopping. Americans who grew up on football know what contact looks like, and a shoestring hitting your shin isn’t contact, no matter how much you wince in fake pain on the pitch.
December 13th, 2007 at 10:15 pm
104
Flatlander says:
Some of these guys (apparently) paid for illegal drugs using personal checks. Who buys drugs with a check?! That’s a whole new level of stupid. That’s approaching London Fletcher-type levels.
December 13th, 2007 at 10:31 pm
105
bama_buck says:
You got that right. The only decent thing about baseball is that it spawned wiffle ball, which can be played by as few as three drunk people in an area the size of a living room.
I think this would havve been an appropriate critique on any given day, but considering an official report on cheaters is out, I guess it is even more poignant.
Long live wiffle ball. Let us never speak the name of it’s pathetic ancesor again.
December 13th, 2007 at 10:56 pm
106
StageCoach says:
hunglikehussain @ 60
“Baseball is General Omar Bradly. Football is General George Patton.
Baseball is Benjamin Disraeli. Football is Huey “Kingfish” Long.”
You had it going there, for awhile, but then you lost me. PLEASE don’t liken football to the “Kingfish.” I love football, and Huey Long was…you know…a thieving, slimeball douchebag.
December 13th, 2007 at 11:01 pm
107
StageCoach says:
Flatlander @ 102
Jerry Springer paid for a hooker with a check. While he was Mayor of Cncinnati. THAT, sir, is a new level of stupidity. OK, maybe not so new a level…but it did set the bar pretty high.
December 13th, 2007 at 11:05 pm
108
irishoutsider says:
I think that’s German for “The Baseball, The”
December 13th, 2007 at 11:07 pm
109
StageCoach says:
Orson
Since you referenced George Will, I am surprised you didn’t include his remark about football. It was quite a few years ago, in an editorial about his love for baseball:
“Football represents the worst aspects of American society, moments of extreme violence interspersed with committee meetings.”
December 13th, 2007 at 11:17 pm
110
DC Trojan says:
You know why some of the people on this thread want to teach their sons to play baseball? Because it’s a game for children. When I first moved to the States, we watched baseball – why? Because it’s obvious, and when it’s late August in southern California and you have no a/c, staying still is a plus.
If you want to get a sense of the intrinsic value and excitement of baseball, take a look at how it’s traveled to other countries. People like to talk about how American sports are unique, but that’s not strictly true as it relates to whether they get played elsewhere. So let’s take a peek, shall we?
Football doesn’t travel because it’s corporate rugby – more rules, more equipment, similar ass-kicking ethos. Just look at American Samoa and (formerly Western) Samoa: two areas with enormous Polynesians who have adapted to sports for hitting people, depending on who took them over. So there’s that, it’s no knock on football.
Basketball has traveled all over the world because all you need is a couple of hoops and a ball. Ten genetic freaks are a help, but not strictly required.
Baseball? Only taken a hold in countries that the US has invaded or quasi-occupied, when there was no competing sport already in place. You think it’s a coincidence that it’s popular in Japan, the Dominican Republic, and Cuba? (I’m excluding Australia because they’ll play anything.)
As for the hacking on “communist” soccer, whatever. No salary caps, no anti-trust exemption, promotion / relegation between leagues, and championships based on the results of games played vice voting on who looks good. Yeah, that’s socialist all right. Maybe there’s no room left for that data in amongst all the baseball stats that fans carry around in their heads – and that to me is really the most damning thing of all about baseball:
It’s a sport so tedious that people amuse themselves with accounting exercises to fill in the time.
December 13th, 2007 at 11:24 pm
111
Chuck says:
Part of me wonders whether Irigaray would say if she evaluated the baseball world. It wants to make a joke about how everyone, even those not on steroids, is thought of as a user.
But then the rest of me tells that part of me to shut up, and forget ever having taken French 311.
December 13th, 2007 at 11:56 pm
112
Nobody Else says:
I agree with all of this, a great rant on a blog full of great rants, except that Test Match Cricket lasts 5 days not 3, unless, of course, England are playing where their defeat is usually assured in 3!
I did attend a Braves game once with a diehard Braves fan who assured me that the genius of the game was in the subtle battle between Maddux and whatever fat fool was batting. I was sitting half a fucking mile away! And yet somehow I missed the nuance of Maddux cutting the corner of home plate. Three hours of my life I will never get back but never another three wasted on baseball.
December 14th, 2007 at 12:08 am
113
Bruce says:
Funny, I feel the same way about the NFL.
December 14th, 2007 at 12:10 am
114
DT says:
Mr Pelican Pants way back @ #59:
“…you could literally watch someone bat for 5 goddamn minutes…”
One of my favorite stories about baseball sucking came from a buddy who went to an astros game in the late 80’s and witnessed Kevin Bass foul off something like 17 straight pitches. You could grow old and die watching shit like that.
On a side note, my sister goes to school with Bret Saberhagen’s daughter and she just recently returned the only Saberhagen cards I could dig up (two ‘87 Fleers and something from a box of Quaker chewy granola bars) signed by the very man who broke my heart when he lead his Royals to victory against my beloved Cards (in about the last year I remember actually caring about baseball–1985). Lucky he even had the chance…everyone knows that Todd Worrell’s foot was clearly on the bag.
And finally, this is about the most memorable thing I’ve seen on EDSBS since I became a daily regular, after getting hooked by the first thing I read on here (the ESPN checklist) what was it, two years ago? Very well done Orson.
December 14th, 2007 at 1:05 am
115
Mr Pelican Pants says:
I guess my loss of the love of the game of baseball started with my moms hate for the time it took out of her schedule since she divorced my dad when I was 7….he was the coach of our park league team,and by coach I mean Bad News Bears style coach with Budweiser on tap…we were usually done practicing by Happy Hour…..she HATED washing clothes and socks full of red dirt and wondered why in the hell baseball just had to have white pants and had to play on red clay, since that always meant having red dirt or blood stains engrained into them on a daily basis….I slid every where, even if I was safe by a mile and that always pissed her off, which in turned meant us getting home at 11pm on game nights and her having to wash and bleach and destain the uniform for the 9am game the next morn….I am sure there are women everywhere who used to be fans of baseball til their sons tracked in red clay into the house…..
December 14th, 2007 at 1:10 am
116
DT says:
Of course I meant “…when he LED his Royals…”
(I only received a minor in English, although I once attended a seminar on proofreading.)
December 14th, 2007 at 1:11 am
117
Mr Pelican Pants says:
Now hockey, on a semi pro level, is fun to watch…..just for the live up close fights, you have to have mad skillz to fight with skates on, especially while getting pummelled at the same time, trying to keep your balance while throwing some sort of bizarre rapid fire hay makers…that makes hockey and for that fact
“SLAP SHOT” the best sport movie ever….long live the Hansen Brothers…….that movie made me want to put down my baseball gear and learn hockey,alas, there is no hockey in South Alabama in 90 degree heat….
December 14th, 2007 at 1:27 am
118
Nick Black says:
Moneyball was a pretty acceptable little book, I thought.
Otherwise, dead-on. This is the best EBSDS in a minute; thanks a lot for the laughs.
December 14th, 2007 at 2:09 am
119
poguemahone says:
(yes, I know I’m a Johnny-come-very-lately, but… fuck you)
Orson, you’re a golden god for writing this. I’m going to print it off, lovingly frame each page and simply point to it every time my roommate tries to get me to watch the fucking Indians. This needed to be written more than anything ever.
December 14th, 2007 at 2:15 am
120
Joe says:
Say what you want about baseball, Orson, it’s had its day in the sun.
But bashing English grad students? Haven’t they suffered enough?
December 14th, 2007 at 3:41 am
121
notthequarterback says:
DC Trojan -
Soccer is also immensely popular because, um, you only need a fucking ball for people to play.
That’s part of the beauty and mass appeal of soccer. You don’t need special equipment to play it at its most rudimentary level…you just need something to kick around. Part of the limited appeal of baseball is the need for gloves, bats, balls, bases measured 90 feet apart, an elevated pitching mound, etc
December 14th, 2007 at 5:03 am
122
anohioirish says:
Bravo
December 14th, 2007 at 7:48 am
123
Bama93 says:
I’ve been a Braves fan since moving to Montgomery in 1979. Thank God for TBS showing every single game. I remember summers playing all day outside and then coming in to watch the horrible Bravos try to not lose another game. I remember the bus trips up to Atlanta for games. Good times indeed.
Others have pointed out that going to games these days rivals circus acts on speed. The distractions MLB has put into place to keep interest levels up are embarassing. Kids want the side action, not the main action.
I couldn’t agree more with Orson’s take on the state of the game. What an absolute sham. Thankfully my 4 year old son is too young to even know that this game is forever tainted. He just finished his first t-ball season and it was the most thrilling thing I’ve ever been a part of. T-ball fucking rocks. Baseball fucking blows.
Fuck you Dave Justice.
December 14th, 2007 at 8:22 am
124
yoyofutbawl says:
107
We have stupider ones here in Charlotte, where a business owner paid for a high end hooker w/ a $3000 business check. The memo said “software consulting”.
Also, one client named “Skipper” left his
“meeting” in a white Mercedes SUV with a dealer tag. The Mercedes dealer here? Skipper Beck.
Dumb & Dumber.
December 14th, 2007 at 8:26 am
125
Harvey Wireman says:
What I do not get about baseball is the following: Why does the Manager wear a uniform? That fat freak is not going into the game anytime soon. Actually, that would be funny if it were applied to college football. Seeing Mangino squeezed into a size XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXL jersey with a helmet painted on his head (simulacra-style, like the Froggy Baudrillard would note), now that would be worth seeing.
December 14th, 2007 at 8:48 am
126
Not a Fifer says:
And then there is the Australian way to watch cricket:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/england/6169186.stm
December 14th, 2007 at 8:52 am
127
UkraineNotWeak says:
That was a fun night in the All You Can Eat seats. Will have to have another Pants Party next season.
December 14th, 2007 at 8:52 am
128
TIGERinATL says:
Orson, can you please post this in Spencer’s “mainstream” blog. You’re obviously preaching to the choir here and the rest of the world needs this. Maybe clean up the language a little.
Yes, DC, baseball is a sport for children, and I can’t wait for my three-year old to be ready for t-ball.
But even he sees football’s superiority: Last night, after his bath, I handed him his baseball underwear some grandparent had given him. He said “don’t we have any football ones?”
But I digress. Soccer is also a children’s sport. It’s entertaining to watch children play because, until they become skilled enough to play defense, there is actual scoring. At least when a football team doesn’t score, the drive can still affect the outcome through establishing field position.
December 14th, 2007 at 8:56 am
129
meatybob says:
“Plus, when you can quote shit like this pants just fly off smart ladies not quite smart enough to realize just how full of shit you really are:
?Like dreams, statistics are a form of wish fulfillment.?”
How true, how true. And yes, pseudo intellectuals, we know who you are and we hate you. That is why we will always vote Republican and hate the Dave Matthews Band.
December 14th, 2007 at 8:57 am
130
Harvey Wireman says:
MLB baseball sucks, but at least it is better than synchronized swimming, male figure skating, NASCAR, curling, bocci ball, and the skeleton.
Nah, I like the skeleton, which I think is a winter sport where they throw some bloke down a slide on a two-by-four that just covers the ass and hopes he makes it alive down the slide.
December 14th, 2007 at 9:12 am
131
Tater Salad says:
Fuktard rhetoric:
It’s probably just me, but I can’t look at any sport that involves money and think it’s free from cheating. No diversion here, just sad to me. Private enterprise one step ahead of anti-doping agencies and testing. All sports are a bunch of Flo-Jo-esque prima donna shitsticks.
December 14th, 2007 at 9:13 am
132
Tater Salad says:
Sports = Professional athletes. What motion for summary judgment?
December 14th, 2007 at 9:14 am
133
Clemson327 says:
Slow clap…
I also share your disdain for pro baseball. I do love college baseball though. I grew up going to Clemson games with my dad and brother, and my brother worked on the grounds crew while he was at Clemson which meant I got to meet some of the players. Once I arrived at Clemson, I watched many a game from a truck bed/scaffolding behind the outfield fence while drinking reasonably priced Busch Lights bought at the Lil Cricket. The people next to us had their own music they played between innings, and we routinely made the outfielders wish they had never made the trip to Clemson…one guy even changed jerseys in an attempt to get out of the heckling.
As for soccer, I played from the time I was 5 until I graduated at 22, and I loved the game. I used to always get pissed off when people would dive though…that crap is ridiculous. I also loved playing goalie because it was the only position where you could clobber somebody and get away with it. I’ll take soccer over the MLB anyday.
December 14th, 2007 at 9:18 am
134
Pants McPants says:
This is some seriously impressive writing here, I’m just having a problem juxtaposing such eloquent nerdism with “hate of baseball”…
For the record, I root for the Tribe. I’m not sure if that really makes me a baseball fan though…It’s really just more of a hipster accessory, like claiming to actually like The Boredoms…
December 14th, 2007 at 9:31 am
135
Allahver Fist says:
AA Thirsty Thursdays with the Jacksonville Suns = teh awesome.
At least dumbass Baseball players provide us with spectacular and foolish deaths. High speed bass boat at night with no lights? Run that sumbitch under the nearest dock! Had a few drinks at the bar? Go full speed into the back of that tow truck that’s lit up like Rockefeller Center! Billy Martin? Billy Martin!
December 14th, 2007 at 9:33 am
136
Orson Swindle says:
Skeleton belongs in the list of sport that should only be performed to blasting speed metal.
December 14th, 2007 at 9:42 am
137
DC Trojan says:
nothequarterback @ 121 – I’m glad that someone finished making my point since I was so riled up that I left it out.
TIGERinATL @ 128 – you plainly have a discerning son who is going to go far.
As for soccer being a low scoring sport – true, very true. If you don’t enjoy watching the ebb and flow of the game, it would be tedious in the extreme – but if nothing else, at least they are moving for the majority of the game. Run, you monkeys, run!
December 14th, 2007 at 10:24 am
138
Futbawl Fan says:
hummmm….shiney titanium rectums
yupp…got yer new rock band name there Orson
well, that or Shit Vs Shinola
December 14th, 2007 at 10:24 am
139
The Conscience of a Nation says:
meatybob-
“How true, how true. And yes, pseudo intellectuals, we know who you are and we hate you. That is why we will always vote Republican and hate the Dave Matthews Band.”
What a vicious, partisan, unfair thing to say. Hatred of the Dave Matthews Blah knows no party bounds.
December 14th, 2007 at 10:26 am
140
sb says:
After a lifetime of ignoring baseball and having attended a beer party that broke into a snoozefest Braves game, I share your sentiment…although I am still trying to find the inspiration for such phrases as “…pulling a phantom peanut of sublimity from a steaming turd of reality…”. Hats off for that gem…oh, and the multitudinous cocktails in your honor, of course…if its gin, I’m pourin’…
December 14th, 2007 at 10:38 am
141
Papa Lou BSU says:
Suffice it to say, I disagree. And I would only note in protest (since you appear to have this well thought-out) that judging baseball by a night out at Turner Field would be like judging all of college football based on seeing a game in the two-thirds empty Division II stadia of your choosing. Shit, I’d hate baseball, too, if that was my only major-league option within a half-day’s drive.
That, and the “impregnating strippers” thing being more a general attribute of any pro athlete regardless of sport — I think Brian Urlacher knocked up two strippers and a cocktail waitress during his morning commute yesterday.
December 14th, 2007 at 10:51 am
142
TIGERinATL says:
Papa @ 141
- I would argue that comparing Turner Field to a “two-thirds empty Division II” stadium is going too far. The Theodore is more like what I imagine a Boston College game is like. No matter how good either BC or the Braves are, they would be outdrawn by hypothetical sub-0.500 Pats or UGA squads.
Also, are the LOOOOOOONG action-less stretches at, say Yankee Stadium, Fenway, or Busch Stadium any more bearable than the ones in Atlanta? I have been forced by the authorities to be sober at several Auburn games and, though not my first option, still enjoyed the games immensely. Could you honestly survive any 9+ inning baseball game sans lubrication? I know I couldn’t.
December 14th, 2007 at 11:29 am
143
Out of Conference says:
Not a fan of MLB, but a huge fan of college hardball. you still signs of strategy, desire to win, enthusiasm, and quality ball at the college level whereas in the pro’s it really is only about strike-outs and home runs. In college, small ball wins a lot of games. Gorilla ball is gaining ground and also gets the job done (LSU in its hayday, USCe now), but small ball is still fun to watch. A quick single, steal second. Sacrifice to third, and then Oh Shit it’s a squeeze at the plate!
December 14th, 2007 at 11:33 am
144
DC Trojan says:
Could you honestly survive any 9+ inning baseball game sans lubrication? I know I couldn’t.
The last time I tried was an Orioles afternoon game in the bleachers – it was about 104 in the sun so i spent my time swilling water and spraying SPF 9000 on my pale carcass. Some drunk bank manager called me an Iraqi raghead because I didn’t stand up during “God bless America” for the 7th inning stretch. It was the best.
In fairness, I did got to a couple of PawSox games in Pawtucket RI when I lived up that-a-way, and those were enjoyable – but when you get a bunch of Rhode Islanders in one place, hilarity ensues. The phrase “local color” hardly does them justice.
December 14th, 2007 at 11:35 am
145
TIGERinATL says:
Clarification on my Braves/Boston College FB comparison:
Unless the magnitude of the game is astronomical (world series or MNC implications) the passion is “meh” at best because these teams are NO ONES primary and rarely even secondary emotional sports investment. They are just distractions between UGA (or your SEC team of choice in the transplant city that is Atlanta)/Falcons games in Atlanta or Red Sox/Pats/Celtics/Bruins games in Boston.
December 14th, 2007 at 11:40 am
146
Orson Swindle says:
We second that–please don’t lump democrats or even wily independents in with DMB fans. It’s grotesquely unfair to all concerned.
December 14th, 2007 at 11:55 am
147
Pierre Bourdieu says:
The text has become spectacle and is now more real than reality. The pdf is mightier than the syringe. The sensational has become sad (baseball) and the sad (Orson) has become sensational.
I like ______ . I dislike ______ .
You like _______ . You dislike _______ .
Some people like mayonnaise on their French fries.
Taste divides.
Very truly yours,
Pierre Bourdieu
December 14th, 2007 at 11:56 am
148
tom says:
I like the fact that a football website is taking a shot at another sport for all their players using steroids…..that’s funny. Pot meet kettle.
December 14th, 2007 at 12:14 pm
149
Orson Swindle says:
They never read the fine print. Never.
December 14th, 2007 at 12:22 pm
150
Papa Lou BSU says:
Sandman wrote:
“If the sport is so much better in person than on TV, then why does every ballpark have bars, restaurants, acrcades, Ferris Wheels, etc?”
A two-fold response…
a) Not every ballpark. Some of us don’t even need the amenity of having electricity flowing through our home team’s scoreboard.
and…
b) As opposed to the stadium clubs, bars, buffets, “family fun zones”, Home Depot-sized “team stores,” party decks, 20-acre jumbotrons and such that populate nearly every NFL stadium and an increasing number of college football stadiums these days?
I won’t defend the ferris wheel… but while I’m a Cub fan who lives within walking distance of Wrigley, I know plenty of Tigers fans, and they hate that damn abomination at Comerica Park more than anyone.
As a baseball fan, I can acknowledge that there are plenty of reasons to hate the sport (hell, you could start and end the argument by saying “Tim McCarver” and even the most rabid seamhead wouldn’t have a response). I think even Orson would agree your objection is not one of them, however.
December 14th, 2007 at 1:01 pm